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Broadening Participation in Engineering to Include People with Disabilities

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    [Music]
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    >> Narrator: Engineers design,
    create and innovate.
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    From airplanes and cars
    to robots and electronics,
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    engineers design products
    we use every day.
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    There’s a great demand
    for skilled engineers
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    with a strong academic background
    and work experience.
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    Increasing the participation of people
    with disabilities in engineering
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    can help to meet this demand.
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    >> Nils Hakansson: People with
    disabilities are problem solvers
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    and engineering is about
    solving problems
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    and improving quality of life
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    and designing environments and
    structures and devices to help people.
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    And we’re experts at that because
    we do it every day in our lives.
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    >> Cynthia: A lot of
    society isn't really built
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    to be accessible for a blind person
    so, throughout my life,
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    I either talk to role models about
    how they have solved a problem
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    or I have to figure it out myself.
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    I think that the problem-solving
    fits really naturally
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    into an engineering discipline.
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    >> Leyf Starling: So, just increasing,
    when you're thinking about putting together
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    the best possible team to
    work on an engineering problem,
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    you want as many different ideas
    coming to the table as possible.
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    >> Constance Thompson: You will find
    a lot of individuals
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    with varying levels of dis-Ability
    think differently about solving problems
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    because they have to
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    and just by inserting that
    into the conversation,
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    inserting that into the way
    that you practice engineering,
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    it's going to change the game.
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    It's a game changer
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    and we need that type of
    game changing attitude in the U.S.
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    to meet those innovation challenges
    that we're going to face.
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    >> Grace: It's important
    for people with disabilities
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    to go into engineering fields because
    they've experienced problems themselves
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    and they probably have ideas on
    how to fix that and what to do.
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    >> Narrator: Human ability
    varies across a wide spectrum
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    including individuals with
    visual impairments,
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    hearing impairments,
    learning disabilities,
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    autism spectrum disorders,
    attention deficits,
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    and mobility impairments.
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    >> Nils: I have a physical disability,
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    I ride a wheelchair.
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    >> Daniel: I have high functioning
    autism spectrum disorder.
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    >> Grace: I'm profoundly deaf.
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    I grew up with two hearing aids
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    and then last year, when I was 17,
    I got a cochlear implant on my right side
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    because I wasn't hearing anything
    through my right ear.
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    >> Billy Price: Yes, I'm in a wheelchair
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    but being in a wheelchair
    shouldn't have any impact whatsoever
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    on my ability to do my job.
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    So, in that sense,
    I'm just the same as everybody else
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    so I don't think I should have
    any sort of,
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    I don't think I should be
    treated any different.
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    I mean, there's a job
    that has to be done.
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    Yes I have an engineering background and
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    I can do it just as successfully
    as anyone else.
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    >> Kat Steele: I think one of the challenges
    for individuals with disabilities
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    is low expectations.
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    We all have different levels of ability
    but often, I think, people make assumptions
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    based upon whether you move a certain way
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    or if you use assistive technology
    during your daily life.
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    >> Cynthia: I don't meet enough
    engineers with disabilities.
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    For example, on my campus, I am usually
    the one person that people go to,
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    “Oh we need your feedback about this.
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    Is it accessible?”
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    I think that people with disabilities
    still have to make a concerted effort
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    to find role models
    who are engineers.
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    >> Narrator: Assistive technology
    and reasonable accommodations
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    can make it possible for
    individuals with disabilities
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    to successfully pursue education
    and careers in engineering.
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    >> Daniel: I was able to get
    more time on examinations,
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    which was extremely helpful.
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    Which gave me time to think on a problem,
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    not be compressed in a very short time span
    to complete a problem,
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    have a very low
    distraction environment.
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    I was in a room all by myself.
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    >> Grace: In school I use an interpreter,
    a sign language interpreter,
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    and also have a note taker
    for each of my classes
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    whenever I request one.
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    >> Leyf: So a talking calculator
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    it's a great tool not just for
    someone with a visual impairment
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    but for someone with dyscalculia
    who has trouble flipping numbers around.
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    >> Nils: I was even able to attend
    a machine shop class,
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    working with a lathe and end mill,
    non-computer controlled, hand controlled,
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    largely because the faculty
    who taught that class
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    were open-minded and really allowed
    me to dictate my limits.
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    >> Narrator: Instructors can make
    their classes accessible to all students
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    by applying universal design,
    designing their classes and lessons
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    so all students have equal access
    to the information.
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    >> Brianna Blaser: Captioning on videos,
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    not only is that great for students
    who might have hearing loss or are deaf,
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    but students who are not
    native speakers of English
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    often use the captions when
    they are watching a video
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    so you know that's a
    great example of universal design
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    that's benefiting all kinds of people.
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    >> Leyf: So for a student
    with a learning disability
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    in reading for example,
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    if they have the opportunity
    to gain the information
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    from an engineering design perspective
    instead of just reading a textbook,
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    they're going to excel more
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    and they're going to feel
    more successful in that area.
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    >> Kat: Many of the new
    educational techniques
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    that incorporate active learning
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    and involving many different types
    of educational material
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    really not only help
    individuals with disabilities,
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    but all students.
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    Each year as you teach a class
    you can introduce some of these changes,
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    hear how students respond,
    and over time,
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    create a more accessible environment
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    within your department
    and in your classroom.
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    >> Narrator: Many engineering assignments
    involve group projects,
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    and faculty can encourage
    classmates to be welcoming.
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    >> Cynthia: I think traditionally people
    with disabilities are sometimes marginalized
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    to,
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    for example, write the lab report rather than
    pouring liquids or using machinery
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    and that's where asserting one's self
    can really come in handy to say, “No,
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    it's just as important for me to learn
    how to use the shop equipment as you,”
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    and so I might need to touch the equipment
    or be instructed on how to use it,
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    but I still need to take part
    in that process.
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    I don't want a group member
    to make an assumption
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    about what I may or may not
    be able to do
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    or in what ways that
    I could use some help
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    so I have to be able to
    communicate my skills and say
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    “Well, this is what
    I can offer the group,
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    and here, maybe formatting
    the PowerPoint slides,
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    maybe that’s something
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    that someone else in the group
    could do.
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    >> Sheryl Burgstahler: The key there
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    is to make sure that every
    team member has a role.
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    And I suggest the first thing t
    hey should do
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    is ask the student
    with a disability
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    how they'd like to contribute
    to the group work
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    and often they'll
    come up with something
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    that maybe the faculty member
    or other students
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    wouldn't have even thought of.
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    >> Kat: Many of our new tools
    that we use on an everyday basis
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    such as CNC machines which are
    computer numerically controlled machines
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    where we use them for mills
    and lathes and drills,
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    a lot of them are
    controlled by computers now
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    and so that actually
    increases access
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    and makes it so that
    more people can easily build
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    the products that they're
    wanting to create.
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    >> Michelle McCombs: These are
    great students.
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    They have a lot to offer.
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    You will learn as much from them
    as they learn from you,
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    if not more.
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    And just the more
    you work with them,
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    it just really
    moves the field forward
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    in ways that you are
    not going to expect.
Title:
Broadening Participation in Engineering to Include People with Disabilities
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
DO-IT
Duration:
09:54

English subtitles

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